Nokia is running ads in Europe for its new Windows Phone 8 devices, the Lumia 920 and 820, emblazoned with the legend âeveryone loves a comebackâ. You canât accuse the once mighty king of mobile of not having a sense of humour about its current lowly position in the smartphone rankings â" more also-ran than undisputed champion. The 800lb gorilla in the room is of course Googleâs Android OS â" which owned a full three-quarters (75%) of the global market in Q3, according to IDC estimates â" versus a fractional 2% for Windows Phone (plus Microsoftâs older Windows Mobile OS combined). That figure incorporates all OEMs using Windows Phone, not just Nokia â" shaving a tiny bit more off Nokiaâs tiny share of the market. Nokiaâs legacy OS Symbian accounted for just 2.3% of the market â" still more than Windows Phone.
Still, Q3 fell just before the launch of Windows Phone 8 so it was never going to be a stellar quarter for the OS, or for Nokia â" left with a portfolio of orphaned Windows Phone 7.5 devices to sell. So while times are undeniably tough for Nokia, tough, fighting talk is the order of the day from Conor Pierce, the companyâs VP of Western Europe. With shiny new Windows Phone 8 hardware to sell, Nokia is spinning that itâs stooped to â" ultimately â" conquer.
The more Windows Phone OEMs, the merrier
Pierce says Nokia is convinced itâs weathered the worst of WP. After spending a year or so in the doldrums â" sweating away at the platform largely on its own â" Pierce says the fact other phone makers are suddenly getting involved again is a sign fairer winds will soon be lifting Windows Phoneâs sails. Sales of its new WP8 Lumias are off to âa really solid start after many, many months of planningâ, he tells TechCrunch. âThereâs never been more excitement for our devices and the Windows ecosystem as there is now. Itâs good to see our competitors coming to the table because that will really help to spread the word and the awareness of the ecosystem. Thereâs a lot of work to be done but itâs looking good.â
âWeâre only at the beginning of what we believe is the opportunity for Windows Phone. Now the competition has come to the market that of course will bring pressure â" healthy pressure because itâll force all players to innovate to the benefit of the consumer and the market,â he adds.
Pierce even goes so far as to suggest Nokia wouldnât so much as wrinkle its brow if Microsoft launched its own Windows Phone handset â" the rumoured âSurface phoneâ â" sticking to his line that âthe more players in this ecosystem the healthier it is for people because they have more choiceâ when asked if Nokia has a strategy prepared should Microsoft decide to unbox its own phone hardware. Although, in a follow up comment, he makes what sounds like a between-the-lines appeal-cum-sales-pitch to Microsoft not to get into the phone making business.
âWhat we need to do is make sure that we continue driving innovation in the [Windows Phone] ecosystem within our portfolio, continue to drive that confidence within Microsoft that we will only do our best, best work for WP8 â" thatâs what our vision is,â he says. âWe donât have, unlike our other competitors, any distraction behind that. Weâll continue driving â" and what youâve seen on the [Lumia] 920 and 820 is only the beginning in terms of  the differentiation that we bring.â
Windows 8 makes WP8 âvastly differentâ
The biggest blast of energy blowing in Nokiaâs direction right now is the launch of Windows 8 â" which, unlike Windows 7 + Windows Phone 7 â" shares look (tiles) and feel (touch) with Windows Phone 8. âGlobally in the next 12 months  we expect 300 or 400 million people to experience the Windows tiled interface through Windows upgrades or new phone sales or tablets etc so thatâs vastly different to what weâve experience in the past,â notes Pierce.
He also reckons Windows Phone 7 has effectively warmed up the carriers to get them pumped for selling Windows Phone 8. âThe people within stores and call centres now have a much stronger, deeper familiarity and acceptance of what weâre doing so we have broken the back of that and now weâre in a position to build that momentum,â he claims, adding: âItâs in [carriers'] interests [to sell Windows Phone 8 devices] because itâs in the interest of people to have a strong third alternative. Itâs not a healthy market or in any industry for it to be driven by two overly strong players. It stifles innovation, it stifles choice.â
âWhen youâre trying to establish something brand new in any industry it doesnât happen in a day,â he adds. âWe know now the amount of effort that is required to build awareness to consideration and consideration to preference. It takes a huge amount of effort and obviously Nokia has been doing all the heavy lifting in the last 12 months as a manufacturer.â
This third ecosystem argument was made before, when Windows Phone 7 launched into a market dominated by Android and iOS, and still they dominate. But Pierce reckons the launch of Window 8 changes the game â" giving carriers a more straightforward story to sell. Â He also notes that Nokia is being deliberately selective in its messaging and how itâs choosing to focus resources on Windows Phone 8 â" opting for some carrier exclusives for its flagship Lumia 920, for instance, which might seem like the last thing a company with a volume problem needs right now.
âItâs all about simplifying the messageâ
âWe know where we stand. We know how much work has yet to be done to make this the success that we all aspire it to be so in that launch strategy across the world we have to be very selective â" as would any player, any challenger in any industry â" so weâve been very focused and selective in which markets we went into and within those markets we also worked with the partners who we feel are most committed and who we feel offer the biggest opportunity not just for the launch but also for the long tail,â he says when asked about why itâs revisited carrier exclusives.
âItâs all about execution, itâs all about simplifying the message, making that message really relevant and resonating to a wider audience. And within that, like any company, we need to be very focused about where we place our investment,â he adds.
Nokiaâs recent financial performance  is arguably a rather more pressing reason for focus. Last month it posted another big loss in its Q3 quarter (of $754 million) and reported shrinking cash reserves, with net cash falling to $4.7 billion by the end of the quarter. The glory days of massive revenues and profits funding orchestral in-house software and hardware plays across multiple platforms are very much a thing of the past to the leaner, meaner and (mostly) Microsoft-powered Nokia of today.
Relations with Microsoft âvery healthyâ
Pierce describes Nokiaâs relationship with Microsoft as âvery healthyâ and claims Nokia suffered no detrimental effects when Redmond outted Windows Phone 8 in June â" leaving it to flog a portfolio of apparently âoutdatedâ Windows Phone 7 handsets. Instead he talks diplomatically of any OS having a ânatural evolutionâ, and adding that âin fact I think [the WP8 news] gave [WP] an injection of confidenceâ. Â Pierce also claims Nokia has actually sold more Windows Phone 7 handsets since the Windows 8 and WP8 launches. âOur current Lumia range â" the 800 and the 610 in particular â" has never been selling better than they are now,â he claims.
(On that point itâs worth noting Pierce fails to mention Nokia has had to discount WP7 devices such as the Lumia 800 in a variety of markets â" so he looks to be glossing over another spot of Windows Phone-induced financial pain.)
Pierce continues: âWeâre working closely with Microsoft on several points: 1) partner engagement, 2) retail execution or channel execution â" making sure that message is very simple because in this industry for Nokia and maybe all manufacturers we could probably write a long list of things weâd like to talk about. With Microsoft and the ecosystem of the platform theyâre bringing⦠thereâs an abundance of great things to talk about. The critical thing is how do we condense that down into a very solid, relevant message and target that towards the right audience â" be that consumer or enterprise.
âOn top of that weâre also working very closely with them regarding the app ecosystem. We know that we have some work to be done regarding securing some of these killer apps on the marketplace, but because of the appetite of the developers to engage weâre confident that weâll continue driving that forward.â
Skidding over Surface
Pierce wonât be drawn on rumours that Nokia has had to shelve plans for a Windows-powered tablet, in the wake of Microsoftâs Surface launch â" which, if true, would amount to another piece of Microsoft-fuelled disruption to its business. âWe have not and Iâm not going to announce any tablet strategy on behalf of Nokia today. Iâm not aware of that assertion [that Nokia's tablet plans were delayed by Surface]. We know where weâre going, we have a very strong portfolio and anything that happens is not going to distract us from what we want to do,â he says.
Asked about the future role of Window Phone 7 â" and whether Nokia could expand its use of this version of WP, potentially even using it as a replacement for its Series 40 OS at the very low end of its smart device portfolio (where Nokia Asha devices currently sit), Pierce does not dismiss this idea out of hand but says no-frills Windows Phone is not a message Nokia or Microsoft wants to be sending out right now. âItâs in the [WP] ecosystemâs interests and Microsoftâs interests that all OEMs continue to drive that experience to lower price points but most importantly that we do not jeopardise the quality of the experience: thatâs critical because right now building that momentum thatâs just going with people, with businesses is very important and that takes huge effort and focus.â
Navigating the future of Windows Phone 8
So for now, as youâd expect, Nokia is focusing its remaining lasers on Windows Phone 8 â" and on making sure its efforts stand out from the johnny-come-lately crowd.
Discussing how Nokiaâs might evolve its WP differentiation efforts in the coming 12 months, Pierce drops some heavy hints about navigation â" NB: this interview took place just before Nokiaâs announcement of Here Maps and its Earthmine acquisition â" telling TechCrunch: âOutside of design⦠and some of the things weâre doing on our display, we also have fantastic incredible imaging innovation through our PureView and the Carl Zeiss lens and some of the Nokia camera lenses that weâre building into that, so if you take that type of technology and you couple that with our navigation â" our Nokia maps platform â" then we have something very solid to bring and weâre only at the tip of the iceberg in terms of what that means for the consumer.
âOn navigation, for example, four out of five cars are currently using Nokia Maps and weâve had some very big players like Mercedes, Volkswagon, Ford etc buying into this and using Nokia Maps as their navigation platform, and then we also have â" bearing in mind that within the entire Windows ecosystem Nokia Maps will be the navigation, the location commerce platform, which is really good, itâs open to all players, be it OEMs, be it whatever device or software you want to buy but whatâs important is that we own that asset.
âAnd what we will do, what we will continue to drive is bringing these points of differentiation, be it on design, be it on imagining, and be it on navigation â" so I suppose itâs a matter of âwatch this spaceâ. We will innovate, and out-maneuver, and outsell everyone, not just our competition, within the ecosystem because thatâs whatâs truly going to drive this ecosystem.â
Nokia is a Finnish multinational communications corporation. It is primarily engaged in the manufacturing of mobile devices and in converging Internet and communications industries. They make a wide range of mobile devices with services and software that enable people to experience music, navigation, video, television, imaging, games, business mobility and more. Nokia is the owner of Symbian operation system and partially owns MeeGo operating system.
April 4, 1974
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Microsoft, founded in 1975 by Bill Gates and Paul Allen, is a veteran software company, best known for its Microsoft Windows operating system and the Microsoft Office suite of productivity software. Starting in 1980 Microsoft formed a partnership with IBM allowing Microsoft to sell its software package with the computers IBM manufactured. Microsoft is widely used by professionals worldwide and largely dominates the American corporate market. Additionally, the company has ventured into hardware with consumer products such as the Zune and...
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